HoopDance

So Many Poems Which Sweeten On Loss

Mortgaged

Filed under: Current Events, Poetry, Politics — Val at 7:30 pm on Saturday, May 2, 2009

Bright-faced flowers and bushes circle these old foundations,

the way wagons rolling West once curved in defense of life and limb.

This is the country where seasons still bloom from memory to hope.

 

Settlers have put down 30-year stakes and nested here on the

well-kempt streets, caped inside green yards played by stair-step

next generations, romping with their furry side-kicks.

 

Weekdays childish hordes grab lunch boxes decorated with

super heroes, stuffed with PB&J’s,  and run for a bus to that place

where they are all taught to count on the future.

 

Weekdays Moms and Dads back out of the driveway,

bearing lunch in a brown paper sack. Frugal and reasonable, they

support the PTA, make work happen, help neighbors, and pay on time.

 

For this crime of naïveté all stand in contempt, and are

accused of harboring the ‘American Dream’. Guilty of

trust and that silly old belief in the law, these little people have

 

Mortgaged it all to powers housed far from the family place,

in great skyscrapers of marble, steel and glass fed by

concrete streets and elevators that rise higher than ethics.

 

There nothing but a faceless number in a computer knows

their address, their name. The only thing green is plastic,

% interest is the only crop; and honesty died with the Pilgrims.

 

Even then some insider with options back-dated, off-shore shells, birthday parties

where the ice statues piss champagne, and bonuses for failure and greed,

is stealing their last identity for quick sale on the internet.

 

______© Val Morehouse, September 2008



 writing and poetry

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